Hartford Courant

Callaway awaits fate after win in finale

- By Tim Healey Newsday

NEW YORK — In baseball, a sure sign that a season is ending is the sudden appearance of large cardboard boxes, in which players stuff their profession­al lives — the apparel they accrued the past eight months, the equipment they will need over the winter or in spring training, maybe the ballpark giveaways they mostly don’t care about.

Before a 7-6 win in 11 innings against the Braves in the finale Sunday, players were in full-blown last-dayof-school mode cleaning out their lockers.

The season ended in truly Metsian fashion. Dominic Smith, in his first at-bat in more than two months after sitting out with a stress fracture in his left foot, hit a walk-off three-run home run when the Mets were down to their final out.

The teams needed extra innings in the meaningles­s game after Adeiny Hechavarri­a — cut by the Mets last month a day before he would have earned a $1 million bonus — hit a tying homer in the ninth.

The Mets finished 86-76, third in the NL East. That represente­d progress after consecutiv­e losing seasons, but they missed the playoffs for the third year in a row and the 11th time in 13 years.

And so begins the wait for chief operating officer Jeff Wilpon and the front office to make a decision on manager Mickey Callaway, who is 163-161 in two seasons. General manager Brodie Van Wagenen in recent days ardently declined to comment on Callaway or any other Mets topic, including Pete Alonso’s historic rookie year, and a Mets spokesman said the team does not plan to announce anything before Wednesday.

Callaway said he will spend the next couple of days driving 19 hours home to Florida.

“I don’t have any anxiety,” Callaway said. “I’m proud of what we did this year. I’m proud of how hard I worked, and I left everything on the field.”

Noah Syndergaar­d allowed three runs in seven innings, striking out nine. In 2019, he made a careerhigh 32 starts — reaching 30 starts for the first time since 2016 — but had a careerhigh 4.28 ERA.

 ?? KATHY WILLENS/AP ?? Mets starter Noah Syndergaar­d allowed three runs in seven innings, striking out nine and walking two, in the season finale against the Braves.
KATHY WILLENS/AP Mets starter Noah Syndergaar­d allowed three runs in seven innings, striking out nine and walking two, in the season finale against the Braves.

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